The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes

Front Cover
Collector's Library, 2004 - Fiction - 376 pages

Stephen K. Medvic s Campaigns and Elections addresses two distinct but related aspects of American electoral democracy both the processes that constitute campaigns and elections and the players who are involved. In addition to this balanced coverage on process and actors, it also gives equal billing to both campaigns and elections, and to contests for both legislative and executive positions at the national and state and local level.

The book starts by providing students with the conceptual distinctions between what happens in an election and the campaigning that proceeds it. Significant attention is devoted to setting up the context for these campaigns and elections by covering the rules of the game in the American electoral system as well as aspects of election administration and the funding of elections. Then the book systematically covers the actors at every level candidates and their organizations, parties, interest groups, the media, and voters and the macro level aspects of campaigns such as campaign strategy and determinants of election outcomes. The book concludes with a big picture assessment of campaign ethics and implications of the "permanent campaign."

 

Selected pages

Contents

A Scandal in Bohemia
7
The RedHeaded League
39
A Case of Identity
71
The Boscombe Valley Mystery
95
The Five Orange Pips
127
The Man with the Twisted Lip
153
The Blue Carbuncle
185
The Speckled Band
213
The Engineers Thumb
247
The Noble Bachelor
275
The Beryl Coronet
303
The Copper Beeches
335
Afterword
369
Further Reading
376
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2004)

Arthur Conan Doyle was born in Edinburgh in 1859. After a rigorous Jesuit education, at Stonyhurst College in Lancashire, he trained to be a doctor at Edinburgh University. Eventually he set up in medical practice in Southsea and, during the quiet periods between patients, he turned his hand to writing. Although Sherlock Holmes was Doyle's greatest creation, he believed his historical novels such as Micah Clarke and The White Company were of greater literary quality. He also created the irascible Professor Challenger in The Lost World and the comic French soldier Brigadier Gerard who appeared in a series of short stories. Doyle was knighted in 1902. Towards the end of his life he devoted much of his time to his belief in Spiritualism, using his writings as a means of providing funds to support his activities in this field. He died in 1930.

Bibliographic information